@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

c0dec0dec0de

@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io

“Incredibly mediocre” dude. Programmer. Bad with words. Enthusiastic cat-botherer.
:debian_logo: :git_logo: :iterm2_logo: :vim:

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luna, to random
@luna@pony.social avatar

This email found you. Roll initiative.

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@luna Make a Wisdom saving throw DC 10 + (number of paragraphs) or lose 2 turns.

davidho, to random
@davidho@mastodon.world avatar

Do people who are not oceanographers know that elephant seals have been helping us collect temperature and salinity data in inhospitable areas of the ocean for the last 20 years?

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@davidho climate sealborg!

pid_eins, to random
@pid_eins@mastodon.social avatar

When pondering whether we should start linking to some external library in systemd, I usually spend some time looking at the library's sources, to understand the quality of the code. While coding style differences are fine, there are certain red flags that make libraries unsuitable for use in systemd, or that indicate questionable quality of the code.

Red flags like this are for example absence of OOM guards on malloc(), absence of reasonable error propagation,

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@jamesh wait, what? I thought order was "implementation-defined" and not reliable, as in you're fucked if you have order-dependence in your globals.
I am aware of a persistent issue that we expect is due to order-dependence in globals, so if there's a way to fix it, I would love to know it.
@pid_eins

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@jamesh Ah, so they wrapped the order-dependence into a reference-counted Singleton. We should do that instead of whatever we're doing.
@pid_eins

janamarie, to random
@janamarie@chaos.social avatar
c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@janamarie They're adorable. I want to pat them on the top like they're happy little dog-creatures.

tess, to random
@tess@mastodon.social avatar

Say what you want about Google's AI search results but you have to admit that at least they're funny

They've automated the shitpost

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@tess always automating the fun things instead of the tedious ones...

daviwil, to gamedev
@daviwil@fosstodon.org avatar

This voxel displacement technique for "modern retro" rendering looks so incredible, really inspiring:

https://blog.danielschroeder.me/2024/05/voxel-displacement-modernizing-retro-3d/

#gamedev #graphics

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@daviwil I wonder how easily one could patch that into gzDoom, for instance. There are numerous retro games with either open-source ports or original source out there.
No, I want to see Descent 1 and 2 with this applied.

jasonkoebler, to random
@jasonkoebler@mastodon.social avatar

Scoop: I obtained the contract Samsung requires independent shops to sign to buy phone repair parts from them.

It requires:

  • "Daily" dumps of customer data
  • The "immediate destruction" of any phones a shop comes across that has third-party parts

https://www.404media.co/samsung-requires-independent-repair-shops-to-share-customer-data-snitch-on-people-who-use-aftermarket-parts-leaked-contract-shows/

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@RustyBertrand oh, no. Fuck them. We buy that shit, it’s ours. You can’t dictate how I use the general purpose computing device I purchased from you or how I fix it.
@00Aaron @jasonkoebler

ayukawa, to Cats
@ayukawa@mastodon.social avatar

She really WILL sleep anywhere.

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@ayukawa Love the safety cover on the power switch.

mattgodbolt, to random
@mattgodbolt@hachyderm.io avatar

Happy 12th Birthday to the funny little project that stole my name

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@mattgodbolt do it back, Matthew Compiler Explorer!

c0dec0dec0de, to GNOME
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

Since we’re all onboard with telling off Linux evangelists in this moment, Linux has privacy issues too! If your screen goes to sleep, when you come back you’re greeted by your screen contents - not the Lock Screen for a solid two seconds or so (at least in GNOME Shell, the default desktop environment for many distros).

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@ebassi @bdiederik
shoulder-surfing isn’t a serious threat to me, so I haven’t bothered to look into fixing it, but it does always happen and reminds me that something is wrong.

c0dec0dec0de,
@c0dec0dec0de@hachyderm.io avatar

@visone and GNOME is a Linux desktop environment. It’s the default on the most widespread workstation and desktop distributions.
But, fine, Linux doesn’t actually do SecureBoot attestation. The other major OSes do. (Yes, you can load a machine-owner key and do it yourself, but that surely doesn’t count as the OS providing it or supporting it)

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